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Date: | Fri, 27 Jul 2001 06:35:00 -0700 |
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Hi all,
We have a little controversy at work over _different
from_ and _different than_. Here's the sentence in
question:
a. Will the generic drug look different from/than my
brand-name drug?
I understand the traditional distinction that _from_,
a preposition, should be used with noun phrases and
_than_, a complementizer, should be used with clauses.
Going by this, _from_ should be used here. However,
I don't think I ever use _from_, and it sounds pretty
bad to me here.
I tried to convince others that _than_ is ok because
there is an elided verb in the complement--_than my
brand-name drug (does)_. They aren't going for it.
Anyway, is anyone aware of a dialect difference in the
use of _from_/_than_? Or am I the only one that does
this...
Ed Keer
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